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Tiger salamander

Salamander, Asiatic (Megalobatrachus maximus) Salamander, European (Salamandra atra) Salamander, long-tailed (Eurycea lucifuga) Salamander, spotted (Ambystoma maculatum) Salamander, tiger (A. tigrinum)... [Pg.659]

Rose, F.L. 1977. Tissue lesions of tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum) relationship to sewage effluents. Ann. N.Y.Acad. Sci. 298 270-279. [Pg.1406]

Froese, J.M., Effects of Dietary Deltamethrin Exposure on the Immune System of Adult Tiger Salamanders Ambystoma tigrinum, M. Sc. Thesis, University of Saskatechewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada, 2002. [Pg.399]

Froese, J.M., Smits, J.E., and Wickstrom M.L., Evaluation of two methods for assessing mechanisms of non-specific immunity in tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum), J. Wildl. Dis., 41, 209, 2005. [Pg.399]

Spiridon, M., Kamm, D Billups, B., Mobbs, P, and Attwell, D. (1998) Modulation by zinc of the glutamate transporters in glial cells and cones isolated from the tiger salamander retina../. Physiol. (Lond). 506, 363-376. [Pg.174]

Behavioral thresholds for w-butyl acetate and n-butyl alcohol in the tiger salamander (Am6jito/na ft n BM/n) were 8.9 x 10 and 6.7 x 10 mol/1, respectively (Mason and Stevens, 1981b). The threshold for amyl acetate has been measured as 10 " mol/1 in frogs and 10 mol/1 in turtles (Enomoto etal., 1992). [Pg.114]

Lindquist, S. B. and Bachman, M. D. (1980). Eeeding behavior of the tiger salamander, Ambystoma tigrinum. Herpetologica 36,144-158. [Pg.482]

Mason, J. R., Rabin, M. D., and Stevens, D. A. (1982). Conditioned taste aversions skin secretions used for defense by tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum). Copeia. 667-671. [Pg.486]

Firestein S., Picco C. and Menini A. (1993) The relationship between stimulus and response in olfactory receptor cells of the tiger salamander. J. Physiol. (London) 468, 1-10. [Pg.690]

Figure 14.2 Scanning electron micrograph of the surface of olfactory receptor mucosa of a tiger salamander. Viewed from this aspect, the end of each individual neuron has an area of approximately 1 (t, but all that can be seen are the cilia (0.2 im in diameter and approximately 10 pm long), of which each neuron has a few projecting from its dendritic knob. The dashed line at bottom indicates a 10-pm scale. Figure 14.2 Scanning electron micrograph of the surface of olfactory receptor mucosa of a tiger salamander. Viewed from this aspect, the end of each individual neuron has an area of approximately 1 (t, but all that can be seen are the cilia (0.2 im in diameter and approximately 10 pm long), of which each neuron has a few projecting from its dendritic knob. The dashed line at bottom indicates a 10-pm scale.
Monitoring the electrical activity of the nervous system does not appear to give results that accord with the behavior of conditioned animals. On the one hand, electrical responses are observed for volatile chemical stimuli that tiger salamanders apparently do not smell. On the other hand, no selective attenuation of their electrical responses takes place under conditions that reproducibly impair their behavioral responding to one odor but not to another. [Pg.263]

Arzt, A. H., Silver, W. L., Mason, J. R. Clark, L. 1986. "Olfactory Responses of Aquatic and Terrestrial Tiger Salamanders to Airborne and Waterborne Stimuli." Journal of Comparative Physiology A, 158 479-487. [Pg.269]

Dorries, K. M., White, J., Kauer, J. S. 1997. "Rapid Classical Conditioning of Odor Response in a Physiological Model for Olfactory Research, the Tiger Salamander." Chemical Senses, 22 277-286. [Pg.270]

Herrick, C. J. 1948. The Brain of the Tiger Salamander Chicago University of Chicago Press. [Pg.270]

Mason, J. R., Johri, K. K. Morton, T. H. 1987b. "Generalization in Olfactory Detection of Chemical Cues Containing Carbonyl Functions by Tiger Salamanders." Journal of Chemical Ecology, 13 1-18. [Pg.271]

Mason, J. R., Meredith, M., 8c Stevens, D. A. 1981. "Odorant Discrimination by Tiger Salamanders After Combined Olfactory and Vomeronasal Nerve Cuts." Physiology and Behavior, 27 125-132. [Pg.271]

Mason, J. R., 8c Morton, T. H. 1982. "Temporary and Selective Anosmia in Tiger Salamanders Caused by Chemical Treatment of the Olfactory Epithelium." Physiology and Behavior, 29 709-714. [Pg.271]

There are at least two examples for stimulation of calcium channels by cannabinoids L-type calcium currents in a neuronal cell line (Rubovitch et al. 2002) and in retinal rods of the tiger salamander (Straiker and Sullivan 2003) were enhanced by cannabinoids. [Pg.329]

Straiker A, Sullivan JM (2003) Cannabinoid receptor activation differentially modulates ion channels in photoreceptors of the tiger salamander. J Neurophysiol 89 2647-2654... [Pg.363]

Figure 3. Tiger salamander Ambystoma tigrinum) following 48 h of UV exposure. Note extensive fungal infections (arrows) over skin surface. Figure 3. Tiger salamander Ambystoma tigrinum) following 48 h of UV exposure. Note extensive fungal infections (arrows) over skin surface.

See other pages where Tiger salamander is mentioned: [Pg.650]    [Pg.650]    [Pg.1353]    [Pg.1383]    [Pg.1383]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.486]    [Pg.486]    [Pg.1353]    [Pg.1383]    [Pg.1383]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.435]    [Pg.438]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.114 , Pg.252 , Pg.343 ]




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